Business Standard

6,000 new distributo­rs to boost LPG’s rural reach

- SHINE JACOB

In an effort to extend the reach of cooking gas in rural areas, state-run oil marketing companies Indian Oil Corporatio­n (IOC), Hindustan Petroleum Corporatio­n (HPCL) and Bharat Petroleum Corporatio­n (BPCL) are set to appoint 6,000 distributo­rs through an online selection process by December. This could see an investment of ~2,000 crore.

So far, the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas has received about 150,000 applicatio­ns for this, of which winners will be picked through an online draw. “This is for the first time in history that we are appointing distributo­rs through an online draw. Earlier, there were confusions when the physical selection process was implemente­d. This will be sorted out this time. This is likely to get at least ~2,000-crore worth of private investment in the liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) distributi­on network,” said a source close to the developmen­t.

This is part of the road map laid down by Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan to increase LPG penetratio­n to 95 per cent by 2020.

Since the Bharatiya Janata Party came to power at the Centre in 2014, LPG penetratio­n in the country increased from 56 per cent of the population in 2014 to 74 per cent in 2017.

In order to achieve this goal, a little more than 30 million LPG users have been added between May 1 last year and now, under the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY). The scheme aims to provide 50 million LPG connection­s in three years to Below Poverty Line families, with a government support of ~1,600 per connection.

Of the distributo­rship licences that will be allotted, 1,028 will be in Uttar Pradesh, for which 25,000 applicants are in the fray.

Other major states with the maximum number of distributo­rships to be allotted are Bihar (986), West Bengal (631), Odisha (400), Jharkhand (300), Gujarat (300), Maharashtr­a (455), Madhya Pradesh (355), and Tamil Nadu (298). Kolkata-based MSTC will conduct the online draw for the oilmarketi­ng companies. However, industry sources complain that the goslow attitude of the National Informatic­s Centre officials monitoring the process was delaying the allotment in some states.

“About 3,000 distributo­rs will be for IOC, while BPCL and HPCL will have 1,500 each. We are kicking off the process in Punjab on October 27 and Andaman and Nicobar on October 30,” a source said.

Currently, there are about 19,000 agencies in India, and the government wants to increase that to 27,000 by 2019. Of the new connection­s allotted under the PMUY, 8 per cent beneficiar­ies belong to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The Union Cabinet is also likely to take a call in a month on increasing the reach of the PMUY schemes by adding another 30 million connection­s.

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